Nathan Buckley’s time as Collingwood coach appears over. But is Ross Lyon really the right man to replace him?

We keep watching this morbid Collingwood Football Club reality show even though we know where it’s going to end up.

Spoiler alert: It ends with Nathan Buckley being chased out of a car park with a swarm of journos draped over his bonnet.

And though we haven’t quite got to that point just yet, it’s entirely justifiable to speculate on who will take the reins of this famous club in 2022 following 10 season of “Buckleydom”.

At the moment, there’s plenty of talk about Ross Lyon perhaps being a perfect fit for the embattled club, yet for a variety of reasons the Magpies could do well to think twice about bringing Ross in. Here’s why.

A Lyon’s share of success

Through 305 games over 13 uninterrupted seasons and spanning two clubs, Ross Lyon, for the most part, operated as an exemplary AFL coach.

He took two moribund clubs out of the absolute wilderness and into the AFL vanguard. He took St Kilda to back-to-back grand finals for just the second time in its history, then Fremantle to the club’s one and only grand final appearance.

His 2009 St Kilda team was one of the very best of the modern era to not win a flag, while those 2013 Dockers were the only club that got within cooee of the Hawks during their hat-trick of premierships. In fact, if it weren’t for deplorable kicking on the biggest stage, Fremantle could have perhaps killed off the Hawthorn dynasty at berth.

Yet despite Lyon’s coaching prowess, his teams were found lacking in the not-too-small realm of consistently putting points on the board.

While sure, he took teams through to September in eight of his 13 seasons as coach, there’s a massive gap on his resume where curating modern offence is concerned, despite having immense talent at both St Kilda and Fremantle.

And why that alone should absolutely not be an impediment to Lyon re-entering the coaching workforce, it should however be a major consideration specifically where Collingwood is concerned, as the Pies’ most glaring problem right now and throughout Buckley’s tenure (off-field issues aside) pertains to dawdling performance forward of centre.

Collingwood’s offence. How bad are we talking?

For all intents and purposes, the Buckley era was a fairly successful one, overseeing a post premiership re-build and qualifying for finals in five of his nine seasons prior to this year’s belly flop. He was one goal shy of becoming a premiership coach himself in 2018.

Like Lyon, he’s very good at what he does, and should continue to do so at the highest level, yet unfortunately, like Lyon, he’s continually demonstrated an inability to create and sustain a modern, threatening attack.

Through 10 seasons, Buckley’s 2018 Pies were Collingwood’s only top-four offensive unit, with their average ranking 10th. That’s an uncomfortable reality, especially when you consider that 22 of the last 26 premiers have all required at least a top-five attack.

While that 2018 team will be remembered as a scorching outfit, and one that had Jordan de Goey, Will Hoskin-Elliott, Josh Thomas and Jaidyn Stephenson combine for 166 goals, the reality is that for the majority of Buckley’s time at the club, the Magpies have been pushing you-know-what uphill when it comes to scoring.

And what’s been even more frustrating for the Pies is that throughout Buckley’s time, he’s been blessed with serious midfield talent with the likes of Dane Swan, Dayne Beams, Scott Pendlebury, Brodie Grundy, Steele Sidebottom and even Taylor Adams all crowned All-Australians under his watch. Yet so much of their industry amounted to naught when it came to converting that production into points.

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And not only did they struggle, but the Pies’ attack crashed in the biggest moments too.

In fact, in Buckley’s four post-2018 finals, Collingwood averaged just 55 points. His current attack sits just 15th in possessions per goal, managing just a single goal from its last three quarters played.

Production aside, the club is completely bereft of key forward talent, evidenced by Collingwood ranking dead-last for marks inside 50.

Whoever does get Buckley’s car park in 2021 will need to demonstrate a heightened understanding of offence, as if he can’t, the Pies will have years more pain in front of them.

But is Lyon really that bad an attacking coach?

Yep, he really is.

In fact, the numbers would suggest he’s actually performed worse than Buckley from an attacking point of view, producing just a single top-four offence in his 13 seasons as head honcho (2009 with St Kilda) while overseeing just two further top-eight attacks with the Saints in 2010 and Fremantle in 2014.

In other words, 10 of Lyon’s 13 seasons as an AFL coach were characterised by rather ordinary attacking football with an average ranking of just 12th, his last four seasons in Perth resulting in attacking rankings of 16, 17th, 16th and 16th. And it’s arguable Lyon had more offensive talent to work with than Buckley ever has.

At St Kilda, he had one of the sport’s greatest ever key forwards in Nick Riewoldt, as well as the club’s all-time best small forward in Stephen Milne. The rest of his squads were peppered with generational talent such as Brendon Goddard and Lenny Hayes, while it’s worth remembering Leigh Montagna and Nick Dal-Santo combined for a handful of All-Australian jumpers.

At Fremantle, Lyon enjoyed the services of Matthew Pavlich and Michael Walters up forward, while his midfields, like Buckley’s, were stocked with extraordinary talent consisting of a couple of Brownlow medallists in Nat Fyfe and Lachie Neale, while being serviced by one of the game’s greatest ruckman in Aaron Sandilands.

Once Pavlich retired in 2016, taking his 700 career goals, six All-Australian jackets and six Fremantle best and fairests with him, Lyon seemingly had few tricks left up his sleeve.

To reiterate, Collingwood has nothing remotely resembling Riewoldt, Pavlich or even Walters on its list, which is something it really ought to consider before shaking Ross’s hand.

Decisions, decisions, decisions

Lyon should and probably will still find his way back to a head coaching gig. And perhaps as soon as 2022.

And if the AFL and its clubs had conquered their own repugnant attitude towards age and second chances, Lyon would probably already have a job, the prospect of him joining forces with Collingwood being null and void.

Yet the reality is the Pies will likely soon need a new coach, with Lyon very much still available.

For any club out there who needs an accountable, defensive mastermind of a coach capable of squeezing every last drop of talent out of its list, Lyon is the man for you.

If your club wants a fast-track to relevance, Ross can do that too, He works fast and sets high expectations which are very much reflected in his and his own coaching staff’s work rate.

However, if you are looking for a coach who is able to improvise and fashion a variety of avenues to goal, who is able to deviate away from Plan A, and here we’re talking about the likes of Alastair Clarkson, Damien Hardwick, Chris Scott or Luke Beveridge, then Lyon probably isn’t the right candidate.

Nailing the right coach is of course not the easiest thing, and in Collingwood’s case it’s a process it really hasn’t had to undertake too often. Mick Malthouse arrived in a Lexus in a puff of smoke and flashing lights in late 1999, while the “Kirribilli agreement” transition to Buckley 12 years later was again not quite standard procedure.

The Collingwood reality show is certainly never short of drama and intrigue. And when you throw a coaching search into regular programming, you can at least expect ratings to go through the roof.

You can read more of James Rosewarne’s work at STATS INSIDER